Western Wall

Western Wall Plaza

The Western Wall is the most holy place accessible to the Jewish people because of Muslim control of the Temple Mount. Known in recent centuries as the “Wailing Wall,” this was built by Herod the Great as the retaining wall of the Temple Mount complex. The plaza was created as an area for prayer when Israel captured the Old City in 1967. At times tens of thousands of people gather here for prayer.

Barclay's Gate

The massive lintel of this gate is preserved to the right of the bush and above the small fillstones behind the staircase. Once erroneously identified with Kipunus’ Gate (mentioned in the Mishnah), today it is known for the 19th century explorer who discovered it. The original L-shaped passageway inside the gate is still preserved but not accessible.

Prayers

The most holy place in the world accessible to Jewish people, prayers are offered up at this wall built by King Herod in the first century BC.

Three times a day the Jewish people pray (morning, afternoon, evening) and they do so with phylacteries tied around their forehead and wrist and with the white and blue prayer shawls.

Wilson's Arch

The men’s prayer area continues from the outdoor section through a passageway to the north. Within this area is a massive arch originally constructed by Herod and now known after a British explorer in the 1860s.

Though only 25 feet high now, the arch originally was 75 feet high when the Central Valley was much deeper.

Largest Stone

An especially large course of stones is visible on the southern and western walls today. On the west the “Master Course” consists of four stones, the largest of which weighs 570 tons and is 44 feet long, 10 feet high and 12-16 feet deep. The next largest stone in the wall is a mere 40 feet long. The largest stone in the Great Pyramid weighs 11 tons.

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Related Websites

The “Wailing Wall” in the 1800s (LifeintheHolyLand.com) A collection of drawings and photographs from the 19th century illustrating the Western Wall, along with explanatory notes by early explorers including Charles Wilson.

Wailing Wall to Western Wall – 1960s (LifeintheHolyLand.com) A collection of photographs of Charles Lee Feinberg with explanatory comments revealing a critical decade in the history of the holy place.

The Western Wall (The Israeli Mosaic) Contains informative sections on the wall itself, Jewish tradition and the wall, recent history, and getting there. Links throughout allow for in-depth study.

Western Wall (Christian Travel Study Program) Limited text, but site features several good pictures with excellent identifying captions.

Kotel Ham’aravi (Camp S’dei Chemed International) Describes both the history and significance of the wall from a distinctly Jewish perspective.

A Prayer at the Western Wall (Shema Yisrael) Provides a service to Jewish people around the world by receiving written prayers at a location in Jerusalem and placing them into a crack in the wall on behalf of the petitioner. Illustrates the Jewish belief that the wall is the “shortest route to G-d’s ear.”

Major General Sir Charles William Wilson (Palestine Exploration Fund) A biographical sketch of a British military man who did extensive archaeological work in Jerusalem, including the identification of the Herodian arch, located in the men’s prayer section, now named for him.